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EXPERTISE

Modern Manners

REAL SIMPLE’S ETIQUETTE EXPERT, CATHERINE NEWMAN, OFFERS HER BEST ADVICE ON YOUR SOCIAL QUANDARIES.

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My family was recently invited to a dinner party, and I offered to bring a dessert. The hostess responded that she would let me know what to bring. I was taken back by her reply. Am I being too sensitive?

K.W.

A friend once showed me the invitation she had gotten to a party that had a note, scrawled in pen, on the bottom: “Thank you for bringing salad for 60!” So, as long as it’s not that extreme—you’re not being asked to bake a soufflé or pick up a pound of beluga caviar—I think it’s fine for the host to ask for the help that she needs. I say this as a person who, among my family and friends, does most of the hosting, which also means most of the spending, cooking, and cleaning up. If it’s a regular dinner party, I am happy for the usual contributions of flowers or a bottle of wine. If it’s a casual potluck, then guests can bring whatever, and I don’t care if there are four kinds of pasta salad. Occasionally I will try to lighten my load with specific assignments, usually for a big holiday meal. (And who’s to say your host isn’t treating this dinner as a similarly special occasion?) I ask graciously and give people choices. (“Do you think you might be able to pick up a pie or make a veggie side dish?”) It would be nice if your host did the same. But console yourself with the fact that nobody is doing all the work and enjoy the party.

About Catherine

The author of the parenting memoir Waiting for Birdy, Catherine Newman has shared her wisdom on matters ranging from family and friends to happiness and pickling in numerous publications. She gets advice from her husband and two opinionated children in Amherst, Massachusetts. How do I politely give my parents, who are in their mid-70s, help that they will never ask for? To be specific, they don’t cook much. This is not new—“foraging” in the fridge was a common dinner growing up. They are pretty healthy, but when one of them gets sick, there is no food in the house, and I may not hear about it until later. I live about an hour away and see them most weeks. Do I call twice a week and ask how things are going? Should I make a food delivery every week? I am the eldest child, and I think my mother sees me as bossy, so I am trying not to be overbearing. But I worry I’ll end up with hungry, sick parents who don’t ask for help.

B.H.

You may be bossy, but your parents are lucky to have you. (And I’m sure they know it.) The trick here, as with older people more generally, is to help care for them without compromising their dignity. I talked to Laurie deSilva, a geriatric social worker, who says that “poor nutrition with older adults is a significant problem and contributes to all sorts of health issues.” She recommended that you find comfort in knowing that your intention is to keep them as healthy and independent as possible. Her number one recommendation is the meal-delivery charity Meals on Wheels. There are programs in almost every community, and you can get more information from the Administration on Aging website (aoa.gov).

If your parents aren’t at this stage yet—and I suspect they’re not—then file that tip away for later and figure

out a way to get the food to them yourself or, as deSilva recommends, with the help of a neighbor. Perhaps the next time you visit, you can tuck a couple of portioned meals into their freezer. (Label them with reheating instructions.) Or delicately spin meal provision as a favor to you: “I made your favorite lasagna, and I’m using it as an excuse to visit you.” Or, “I cooked too much beef stew. Can you take it off my hands?” Clearly, at least one parent has complained about the situation or you wouldn’t know about it. As deSilva puts it, “Bottom line, there is no wrong way to do this. They need nutrition, so whatever route everyone will be most comfortable with—or even if they’re not, should it come to that—is the right one.” One of my daughtersin-law always asks for cash or gift cards for her children on birthdays or holidays. I feel that she is teaching them bad manners. I would prefer to have the cost of my gifts remain classified. Isn’t that why we remove price tags? How can I let her know how I feel without causing a rift?

I.H.

Let’s leave aside the parenting issue of teaching manners for now—because, alas, it’s not really yours to take fer guidance in gift selection instead. Another, if time and geography allow, is for you to take the kids shopping to share in the experience and to get to know their tastes. A third choice might be the most practical: Give the kids the money, but ask them to send you a photo to show you what they ended up with. This won’t mask the dollar amount, but it will connect your generosity with a tangible object (e.g., the Lego set Grandma got me), while reinforcing a little something about expressing gratitude.

on—and address instead your experience of gift giving. Presenting cash or gift cards can feel crass: It’s unadorned expense, without a lot of sentimental value. The flip side is that the kids choose something they want, rather than being given something they may not. Is there an option that offers the best of both worlds? One possibility is to thank your daughter-inlaw for trying to make your life simpler, then say that you would preI am due soon with my second child. For practical and sentimental reasons, I saved many clothes and toys from my first. Is there any way to kindly let friends and family

know that we would rather not receive gifts? I would like to send out birth announcements, but I don’t know how to phrase that request or if it would be tacky.

H.L.

Isn’t everyone relieved by the “no gifts” admonition? Or is that just me? Either way, phrase it graciously enough and it won’t be tacky at all: “We are overflowing with love—and stuff—so please welcome our baby without a gift!” Some people (my mother, for example) will send you a gift anyway, and that’s fine. The one thing I wouldn’t recommend— and I’ve changed my mind about this recently—is that you ask for charitable donations rather than a gift. It seems like a good thing, but this request offers well-wishers all the pressure and expense without any of the reward of buying adorable, tiny hedgehog-printed pajamas.

My son and his fiancée live out of town and are planning a small destination wedding next year. They will be making a trip here in a few months, and I would like to host a party so my friends (who won’t be invited to the wedding) can meet my future daughter-in-law. I know etiquette says that you’re not supposed to invite people to an engagement party if they’re not invited to the wedding. Can I simply call it something else?

P.K.

Despite the fact that manners experts consider this—“invite everyone to the wedding who’s invited to the engagement party”— one of the inviolable wedding rules, I’m going to veer from tradition and say go ahead. Of course you want your friends to meet this lovely woman! Seizing the opportunity makes sense. Sure, don’t call it an engagement party, but do be transparent. The wedding is not a secret, and people will find out that they aren’t invited. Send an invitation that says, “Come and meet our son’s future wife! They’re planning a private wedding far away, but we’re using their visit as an excuse to throw a party for our friends.” Is it a bit awkward? Maybe. But you should never squash the impulse to celebrate as joyfully— and as inclusively—as possible.

HAVE AN ETIQUETTE QUESTION?

Submit your social conundrums to Catherine

at REALSIMPLE.COM/MODERNMANNERS. Selected letters will be featured on these pages every month.

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